Education

Aggressive Therapy Keeps Athletic Dreams on Track

Max Diaz’s entirefuture hinged on how well — and how quickly — he could recover from acatastrophic elbow dislocation. A champion high school wrestler, he was facingthe end of his athletic career if he couldn’t get back to the mat before hegraduated.

This story has ahappy ending. As Max heads off to college this month on a full scholarship and asthe holder of an All American title, he is grateful to pediatric orthopedicsurgeon RogerSaldana, M.D. of MiamiOrthopedics & Sports Medicine Institute for treatment that allowedhim to save his senior season and keep his athletic dreams on track.

“Dr. Saldanaaffected the whole course of Max’s future,” said Max’s mother, Jessica Snyder.“He was very blessed tohave such a great surgeon and great people helping him recover.”

(Watch Now: The Baptist Health News Team hears from patient Max Diaz and pediatric orthopedic surgeon Roger Saldana, M.D., of Miami Orthopedics & Sports Medicine Institute. Video by George Carvalho.)

Max was injuredduring a pre-season national contest that he had hoped would set the tone forhis all-important senior year at Miami Coral Park High School. His match cameto a sudden end when, in an improper maneuver, his opponent applied pressure tothe back side of his elbow, causing it to buckle in the wrong direction.

“When he choppedthe elbow, it dislocated and I collapsed on the floor,” Max recalls. The paindidn’t immediately set in and he was confused at first. His brain kept sendingmessages to his arm to move, he says, but “it didn’t listen. That’s when I knewthe match was done.”

His mother, who waswatching the contest online from home, was frantic. “I saw it happen,” sherecalls, still getting choked up months later. “I kept watching and realizedhe’s not getting up.” Max’s elbow popped back in on its own and he was taken toan emergency room in Iowa. But the full picture of the injury didn’t emergeuntil her son returned from the Midwest, his arm in a protective sling, andthey consulted Dr. Saldana.

A Devastating Injury
Following an MRI, Dr. Saldana determined the trauma from the dislocation had torn the main ligament that holds the elbow together, disrupted the nerve to his hand, damaged other soft tissues and caused a small fracture. Although Max could heal over time, the stability of the joint would be compromised. Dr. Saldana determined the only way Max could return to wrestling would be with surgery for ulnar collateral ligament reconstruction. And the usual recovery for such a surgery can take nine months to a year.

“For Max, thatwasn’t an option because he wanted to be looked at by college recruiters,” Dr.Saldana says.

Max tried to keepa positive attitude. As one of five children in his family, getting a collegescholarship was a key to his future. And he wasn’t ready to give up on hispassion for wrestling.

“This waseverything he had worked so hard for,” his mother says. “When the injury happened,I thought this can’t be the way this plays out. This can’t be the end of thestory.”

Making the Repair
Dr. Saldana performed surgery on Max in early November, repairing and reattaching his ligament and tendons. The nerve that causes that intense “funny bone” discomfort had been stretched in the dislocation, so it had to be repositioned. Dr. Saldana also reinforced the elbow by implanting a polymer band inside the joint to support its stability, especially while Max was healing. Rehabilitation began as soon as possible with physical therapist Greg Kaplan, who is based at the Institute’s West Kendall Baptist Hospital location.

“It was intensivetherapy. We put the pedal to the metal,” Max says. His recovery and progresswere closely monitored by Dr. Saldana. The program was cautiously aggressive,keeping in mind the goal of getting him back to his sport but also of keepinghim safe. 

Not only was Max able to return to wrestling three months later, he thrived. He took second place in his first match after his return, a tri-county invitational, and later clinched the designation as All American. His senior season was the success he had hoped. He fielded multiple scholarship offers, selecting William Penn University in Iowa as the best fit when he begins college this fall.

Max is glad he put his future in the hands of Dr. Saldana, who he says treated him as an individual and fully embraced how high the stakes were. He’s glad Dr. Saldana believed in him as much as he believed in Dr. Saldana. “I trusted him, but then you have to go a step beyond that,” Max says. “He was amazing.”

Healthcare that Cares

With internationally renowned centers of excellence, 12 hospitals, more than 27,000 employees, 4,000 physicians and 200 outpatient centers, urgent care facilities and physician practices spanning across Miami-Dade, Monroe, Broward and Palm Beach counties, Baptist Health is an anchor institution of the South Florida communities we serve.

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